Scripture References

  • Acts 27
  • 2 Corinthians 11
  • Acts 21
  • Acts 23
  • John 19

Introduction

  • Guest speaker Jonathan “JP” Pokluda continues Lake Pointe’s Acts series, “There Is More: Endgame,” walking through Paul’s harrowing voyage in Acts 27.
  • From a prisoner’s chains, Paul steadies 276 frightened people, proving that God – not weather, not authorities – holds the outcome.
  • The chapter carries three big lessons: stay calm by remembering who is in charge, realize storms reveal real faith, and do your part while trusting God for everything else.

Key Points / Exposition

1. Stay Calm by Remembering Who Controls the Outcome

  • Paul, though in chains, warns the sailors that sailing after the Day of Atonement is disastrous; they ignore him.
  • His peace rests in God’s sovereignty: Paul cannot command weather or captains, but he can command his own obedience, speech, and attitude.
  • Obedience is never measured by immediate results; it is measured by faithfulness to God’s leading.
  • Illustration: an eighth-grade flight that hit severe turbulence – a Bible bouncing off the ceiling – exposed a deeper fear: being out of control.
  • Story: a bar confrontation where the aggressor calmly phoned two massive friends; his calm came from confidence in who backed him. Believers stay calm when they know who backs them.

2. The Storm Is Where Our Faith Is Seen

  • Hurricane-force winds batter the ship for 14 days; cargo and tackle are thrown overboard, hope is lost.
  • An angel assures Paul that he must stand before Caesar and all aboard will survive.
  • Paul relays the message: “Keep up your courage…for I have faith in God that it will happen just as he told me.”
  • Storms give Christians their greatest platform; without trouble, faith remains theoretical.
  • Historical note: John Wesley realized he was not truly saved after watching calm Moravian missionaries sing during a life-threatening storm.

3. Do Your Part and Trust God for the Rest

  • Sailors try to abandon ship; Paul insists, “Unless these men stay with the ship, you cannot be saved.” Soldiers cut the lifeboat away.
  • For two weeks no one has eaten; Paul breaks bread, thanks God publicly, and everyone eats – basic self-care restored.
  • Practical takeaway: keep doing the basics (rest, Scripture, prayer, community) even when life feels chaotic.
  • Illustration: a daughter “driving” the grocery-cart car – Dad lets her turn the wheel but still directs the cart toward his unseen grocery list. Sometimes God lets us feel in control; other times He steers another way for a larger purpose.

Major Lessons & Revelations

  • God owns the outcome; our role is simple obedience.
  • Storms do not create faith; they reveal the faith already present.
  • Public courage in crisis can lead others to salvation and safety.
  • Neglecting spiritual and physical basics during trials compounds the danger.
  • God may calm the storm, or He may calm His child within the storm – either way, He is faithful.

Practical Application

  • Surrender your need to manage every variable; practice immediate obedience in the small things.
  • Speak up with reasoned, Spirit-led courage even if people ignore you.
  • Maintain basic rhythms of Scripture, prayer, community, rest, and healthy habits when life gets turbulent.
  • View current hardship as a platform to display authentic faith to onlookers.
  • Rehearse God’s past faithfulness to strengthen present trust.

Conclusion & Call to Response

  • The message closed with a sweeping reminder of God’s proven experience – parting seas, shutting lions’ mouths, raising Jesus from the dead. If He has conquered death, He can certainly handle our storms.
  • “If God is for you, who can be against you?”
  • Whether He stills the wind or steadies your heart, He has you securely in His hands. Look at the birds, look at the flowers – your Father cares far more for you.

Prayer

  • Father, calm Your people in their storms and thank You for Jesus’ death and resurrection.
  • Give us fresh vision of eternity so present problems shrink in comparison.
  • Bless the church and its influence, and commit every listener to Your care in Jesus’ name.

References & Resources

  • Lake Pointe sermon series: “There Is More: Endgame”
  • Guest speaker: Jonathan “JP” Pokluda (Harris Creek Baptist Church)

Insights

  1. When life shakes like turbulence, remember the cockpit is occupied; God still holds the yoke.
  2. Outcomes don’t prove obedience; your courage to speak up does, so trust beyond the results.
  3. Storms strip priorities fast, revealing what you worship; choose to anchor in eternal truth.
  4. Faith isn’t avoiding rough air; it’s opening Scripture mid-drop and finding steady ground inside.
  5. Your peace can pilot others; someone’s survival may hinge on your choice to lead while chained.
  6. If God can outrun death, He can outlast this downpour – so stop fearing the forecast.

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